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Bolivia, opposition agree on referendum, Morales term limit

AFP, October 20, 2008

LA PAZ, Bolivia - Bolivia's government and opposition agreed Monday to a vote on a new constitution and early polls next year after leftwing indigenous President Evo Morales vowed to contest just one more re-election.

The accord paves the way for a vote in congress to enshrine the deal and set the dates of January 25 for the plebiscite and sometime in December 2009 for the legislative and presidential elections, officials said.

The ruling Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) party and the opposition grouping "have reached a decisive accord that completes the structure of the constitutional text," Vice President Alvaro Garcia told a news conference in La Paz.

If passed by Bolivia's 157-seat bi-cameral congress by the required two-thirds majority, the measures could go some way to resolving political instability in South America's poorest nation which has repeatedly flared into street violence.

The MAS and its allies hold 84 of the seats, while the opposition has 73.

Tensions remain high after clashes last month between pro- and anti-government demonstrators which left 19 people dead and led Morales to impose martial law on a northern state.

The government said at the time it feared the volatility could become a civil war.

Today, the country remains divided between the Andean mountains to the west, home to much of the six-million-strong indigenous population backing Morales, and the more prosperous eastern lowlands, where rebel governors are agitating for autonomy.

Morales, a former coca farmer hostile to the United States who has allied himself with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, had proved a polarizing figure since being elected in 2006.

He has embarked on far-reaching reforms designed to give greater power and wealth to the indigenous population, angering the economic elite in the east, which is of mainly European descent and which refuses to see huge land holdings carved up.

He has also nationalized several key companies in the country, especially in the energy sector, which is Bolivia's main export earner. Most of the natural gas fields are located in the east.

Several of Morales's reforms are enshrined in the draft constitution.

After the constitutional court declared his decree calling a referendum in December this year was invalid -- because such a decision could only be made by congress -- Morales made a characteristically strong-willed effort to get his way.

On Monday he walked into La Paz at the head of a march of 50,000 rural and indigenous supporters clamoring for congress to approve the referendum.

The nucleus of the march had set off a week ago from a southern town 200 kilometers (125 miles) away.

The hasty accord between lawmakers as the massive crowd marched towards congress defused what could have been an explosive protest in the capital.

To bring the opposition around, Morales had to agree to not seek re-election in 2014.

He would, however, be able to run in the December 2009 elections, which have been brought forward a year.

Bolivia's current constitution only permits one five-year presidential term. But Morales's draft stipulates a two-term limit.

A recall referendum in August this year showed Morales enjoys the support of more than half the country.

1 comment:

This article is misleading and an afront to the families of those who died in the Pando massacre. The article says "Tensions remain high after clashes last month between pro- and anti-government demonstrators which left 19 people dead and led Morales to impose martial law on a northern state"According to the many witnesses and the video footage, what actually happened in Pando is that a peaceful march of ´pro-government supporters´ were ambushed and shot at by right-wing snipers, hiding in trees etc. Over 30 people were killed, many tried to escape by jumping into the river, and were shot at in the water. Many people are still missing. The Prefect of Pando has been arrested for his alleged part in the massacre, including arming and training the snipers.